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MILAN — United States speedskater Greta Myers made her Olympic debut in the women’s 3000m on Saturday at Milano Speed Skating Stadium, where she finished with a time of 4:13.46. 

Only time will tell if her time how Myers’ time will rank among the field, but she won’t make the podium.

Myers raced in the first pairing alongside Canadian Laura Hall and finished more than seven seconds behind Hall (4:06.13). Myers was knocked out of medal contention after the next pairing of Merel Conijn (4:01.65) of the Netherlands and Kaitlyn McGregor (4:04.97) of Switzerland finished.

The field of 20 skaters includes reigning 2022 Beijing silver medalist Francesca Lollobrigida of Italy, in addition to bronze medalist Isabelle Weidemann of Canada.

In individual races, skaters race against the clock in pairs, alternating lanes each lap to cover equal distances. Speed skaters use clap skates to ensure their blade stays in contact with the ice to get a stronger and longer push.

There will be more chances for Myers to contend for a medal. In addition to the 3000m, Myers will compete in the women’s 1500m, women’s 5000m and women’s Mass Start.

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When the WNBA and players’ union met on Monday in New York, the league promised a new collective bargaining agreement proposal. It delivered that offer on Friday, Feb. 6, a person with knowledge of the negotiations told USA TODAY Sports. The details of the new proposal were not available.

WNBPA president Nneka Ogwumike told the Associated Press Friday that the gap between the two sides on issues like revenue sharing continues to be vast. But the players’ union wants to close it and avoid a lock out or strike.

‘I know our players 100% want to play this year,’ she said. ‘We want a season.

‘We made the point that once we nail (revenue sharing), we can get everything else done.’

The players are asking for 30% of the gross revenue. The league’s previous proposal, one the other had, offered more than 70% of net revenue. The WNBA’s previous offer also included a maximum $1 million base salary, with a projected revenue sharing component that raises players’ max total earnings to more than $1.3 million in 2026. 

The regular-season is supposed to tipoff May 8. But before that can happen the Toronto Tempo and Portland Thorns will have an expansion draft. Free agency and the WNBA draft also need to take place.

WNBA players authorized the union executive committee to ‘call a strike when necessary’ in December.

‘Having the strike on the table is something that we’re very much aware of, but there’s so many more conversations that have to happen,’ Ogwumike told the AP. ‘You know, we’re not just going to say, ‘Hey, today’s the day (we’ll strike).’ You know, I think that’s what we’re demonstrating right now is negotiating in good faith.’

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SAN FRANCISCO — When the Class of 2026 for the Pro Football Hall of Fame was finally, and officially, unveiled on Thursday night, it was only natural to connect some dots.

Larry Fitzgerald was once a Minnesota Vikings ballboy, when he got a close-up view of how Randy Moss and Cris Carter operated.

Luke Kuechly tallied at least 100 tackles in every NFL season he played, yet there was a reason the dominant linebacker lasted just eight years: Concussions.

Adam Vinatieri is the NFL’s all-time leading scorer, with a signature kick in a blizzard in a 2001 divisional playoff game that launched the Patriots dynasty – and had NFL Coach of the Year Mike Vrabel reminiscing earlier in the day, while ramping up for Super Bowl 60.

‘One of the greatest feats I’ve ever seen on a football field,’ Vrabel reflected of the snowfest in Foxborough. ‘You could barely run, let alone approach and kick a football.’

Then there’s Drew Brees and Roger Craig. Let’s connect some dots.

Brees hailed his former Saints coach, Sean Payton, for believing in him more than he believed in himself while at a career crossroads punctuated by major shoulder surgery.

Craig was viewed by 49ers architect Bill Walsh as the versatile, missing piece for the West Coast scheme triggered by Joe Montana. Now, more than 30 years since he retired, Craig, 65, was selected as a finalist from the seniors category.

The connection? As Brees explained, when he went to New Orleans in 2006, Payton began indoctrinating his new quarterback in a new system by having him absorb an abundance of film from Walsh’s cutting-edge offense.

‘We actually started off watching all the 49er Bill Walsh film,’ Brees said. ‘I think a lot of the attention went to Montana, went to (Jerry) Rice, it went to other people. What you started to realize very quickly was that Roger Craig was the secret sauce in so many ways.’

Brees, second all-time for passing yards and passing TDs, is mindful of Craig’s historical calling card: In 1985, he became the first player in NFL history to rush for 1,000 yards while tallying 1,000 receiving yards in the same season, a feat that has been matched by only two others – Marshall Faulk (1999) and Christian McCaffrey (2019).

‘He was truly one of the first every down, multi-purpose backs,’ Brees added. ‘And obviously, as you begin to dig into statistics, you realize just how exceptional he was at that. So, a lot in those early days (with the Saints), we’re watching film on Roger Craig, which you wouldn’t think that you’d be watching 25-year-old film. But you go back to the guys that were doing the absolute best and it was the fundamental components by which a lot of the offenses are run today.’

Which is indeed a Hall of Fame connection.

Contact Jarrett Bell at jbell@usatoday.com or follow on X: @JarrettBell

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  • Erin Jackson became the first Black American to win an individual gold medal at the Winter Olympics in 2022.
  • She is also the first Olympic flag bearer to have competed in roller derby, a sport she started in 2009.
  • Jackson is set to defend her Olympic title in the 500-meter speed skating event at the 2026 Milan Cortina Games.

MILAN — Speed skater Erin Jackson has made Olympics history again.

At the 2022 Beijing Games, she became the first Black American to win a gold medal in an individual event at the Winter Olympics. Now, she begins the 2026 Milan Cortina Games with another distinction.

Unofficially, at the opening ceremony on Friday, Feb. 6, Jackson became the first flag bearer to have competed in roller derby. You know, the sport where women lace up roller skates, strap on a helmet and a steely gaze and hit the track for bumping-and-bruising team duels.

More than a decade ago, before Jackson started skating on ice, she joined the Jacksonville RollerGirls not far from where she grew up in Florida.

‘If you haven’t seen a roller derby event, I really recommend it,’ Jackson, 31, said in October at the Team USA media summit in New York.

Her career on the wooden track started in 2009, and she was rolling as recently as 2023. Then she hung up the roller skates before ramping up preparations for her second Winter Olympics while determined to keep her body intact.

‘I decided for my health and for my back safety that I should probably put that on hold for a little bit,’ she said, then making it clear she hasn’t abandoned her Jacksonville RollerGirl teammates. ‘ … I’d love to get back to it.’

‘Never seen her sweat’

Stephanie Gentz was Jackson’s roommate on road trips with the Jacksonville RollerGirls. She witnessed what most of the sports world missed.

A future Olympic champion made roller derby her domain.

‘She’s able to turn her mind on and just do the job and get it done correctly no matter what,’ Gentz said of Jackson. ‘I’ve never seen her break under any high-pressure situation. I’ve just never seen her sweat or get nervous.

‘She would always be the person that we would put out on the line if we needed to get the job done efficiently and correctly. She always rose to the occasion.’

Sound familiar? In the women’s 500 meters final at the 2022 Winter Olympics, Jackson triumphed. Here, she will try to defend her Olympic title in the 500 meters and also compete in the 1,000 meters.

Off and on the ice, Jackson can come across as strictly business, Gentz noted. But the Jacksonville RollerGirls discovered a different side of Jackson.

‘We’d go back and chat about the games and just laugh about some of the dumbest stuff that we did on the track,’ Gentz said. ‘And she was able to laugh at herself. It’s really good to have a teammate that can do that.

‘She won a gold medal. But she’s able to laugh at herself..’

The cameradie clearly appealed to Jackson.

‘It’s the only team sport I’ve done,’ she said, ‘so it’s just amazing to have that community and just have like people to share the track with.’

Should roller derby be an Olympic sport?

Even at 33, Jackson likely would be the front-runner to serve as America’s team captain if roller derby becomes an Olympic sport. And if you think the idea of roller derby in the Olympics is silly, well, don’t forget that break dancing was part of the 2024 Summer Olympics.

‘I think roller derby should be an Olympic sport,’ Jackson said. ‘I think it’s really exciting.’

Not to mention a fast-growing sport, according to Jackson.

‘I think COVID kind of dampened that a little bit, but it’s on its way back,’ she said. ‘So yeah, I definitely love to see that in the Games.’

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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Three out of six American skiers, including Lindsey Vonn, were able to race in Saturday’s downhill training run at Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre before the event was canceled due to weather.

The first training run, scheduled for Feb. 5, was also canceled after heavy snowfall in Cortina the day before. Friday’s second training run proceeded in its entirety, though not without multiple delays (one for a crash and another for fog).

Twenty-one of 46 skiers raced Saturday, the final training run before the women’s downhill medal event Sunday, Feb 8. Two hours passed between today’s initial weather delay due to fog and FIS’s decision to call the event.

American Breezy Johnson posted the fastest time Saturday, clocking in at 1:37.91. Vonn finished third in 1:38.28. Jackie Wiles came in last at 1:41.85 after topping Friday’s training run.

Scroll below for full results from every skier as well as highlights from the session. 

Downhill training canceled for half the field

Race organizers made the decision to cancel the rest of the training run because of the snow and fog on the Olympia delle Tofane.

Skiers who had not yet gone were allowed to go to a lower portion of the hill so they could get more time on the Olympic course ahead of Sunday’s downhill. Their times did not count, however, since they did not race the same course as the other skiers. 

The decision will not affect Sunday’s downhill because one training run was already completed. At least one training run has to be done for a downhill to happen. 

Women’s final Olympic downhill training results

Twenty-one skiers completed runs down the course, and two other participants elected not to start, before the training run was canceled due to fog and snow:

  1. Breezy Johnson, USA ….. 1:37.91
  2. Kira Weidle-Winkelmann, Germany ….. 1:38.12
  3. Lindsey Vonn, USA ….. 1:38.28
  4. Ariane Raedler, Austria ….. 1:38.34
  5. Emma Aicher, Germany ….. 1:38.75
  6. Sofia Goggia, Italy ….. 1:38.77
  7. Federica Brignone, Italy ….. 1:38.84
  8. Kajsa Vickhoff Lie, Norway ….. 1:38.88
  9. Laura Pirovano, Italy ….. 1:38.91
  10. Cornelia Huetter, Austria ….. 1:38.96
  11. Nina Ortlieb, Austria ….. 1:39.02
  12. Mirjam Puchner, Austria ….. 1:39.12
  13. Ilka Stuhec, Slovenia ….. 1:39.12
  14. Jasmine Flury, Switzerland ….. 1:39.46
  15. Elena Curtoni, Italy ….. 1:39.64
  16. Nicol Delago, Italy ….. 1:39.67
  17. Alice Robinson, New Zealand ….. 1:39.76
  18. Romane Miradoli, France ….. 1:39.95
  19. Malorie Blanc, Switzerland ….. 1:40.39
  20. Corinne Suter, Switzerland ….. 1:40.72
  21. Jackie Wiles, USA ….. 1:41.85
  22. Marte Monsen, Norway ….. DNS
  23. Ester Ledecka, Czechia ….. DNS
  24. Janine Schmitt, Switzerland ….. DNS
  25. Isabella Wright, USA ….. DNS
  26. Keely Cashman, USA ….. DNS
  27. Laura Gauche, France ….. DNS
  28. Delia Durrer, Switzerland ….. DNS
  29. Nadia Delago, Italy ….. DNS
  30. Valerie Grenier, Canada ….. DNS
  31. Julia Pleshkova, Individual Neutral Athletes ….. DNS
  32. Rosa Pohjolainen, Finland ….. DNS
  33. Camille Cerutti, France ….. DNS
  34. Elvedina Muzaferija, Bosnia and Herzegovina ….. DNS
  35. Jordina Caminal Santure, Andorra ….. DNS
  36. Cande Moreno, Andorra ….. DNS
  37. Barbora Novakova, Czechia ….. DNS
  38. Elisa Maria Negri, Czechia ….. DNS
  39. Cassidy Gray, Canada ….. DNS
  40. Matilde Schwencke, Chile ….. DNS
  41. Mary Bocock, USA ….. DNS
  42. Nicole Begue, Argentina ….. DNS
  43. Alena Labastova, Czechia ….. DNS
  44. Katarina Srobova, Slovakia ….. DNS
  45. Anastasiia Shepilenko, Ukraine ….. DNS
  46. Rebeka Jancova, Slovakia ….. DNS

Fog delays downhill training

Fog rolled in to the top of the Olympia delle Tofane course in Cortina, putting the training run on hold with roughly half the field still to go. Twenty-one skiers had completed their runs and two did not start when the course was put on hold.

Lindsey Vonn cruises in downhill run

Lindsey Vonn was shaky in a couple of spots, including near the bottom of the course where she also had an error Friday. But she again showed no obvious sign of her wrecked left knee, and she shaved two full seconds off her time, finishing today’s run in 1:38.28. 

She’s currently third, 0.37 seconds behind leader and American teammate Breezy Johnson.

Vonn gave a small fist pump when she finished – as if to say, check – before walking through the mixed zone and stopping briefly to tap Johnson on the shoulder. “Nice run,” she told her teammate, before moving along.

Near-crash derails American Jackie Wiles

Jackie Wiles topped the leaderboard in Friday’s first downhill training session, but she was not as successful today after she nearly crashed in the top section.

Wiles posted a time of 1:38.94 Friday to lead the field. Her time today was almost three seconds slower: 1:41.85.When Wiles finished her run, she took off her goggles, put her hands on her hips and did the little “choke” hand signal by her neck.

American Breezy Johnson takes early lead

Great run for Breezy Johnson. Looked smooth and in control whole way down and her time of 1:37.91 put her in first place. (With many skiers still to come.) Her time was almost three seconds better than the first training run Friday.

Johnson raised her fist in celebration after she’d finished.

Italian star goes from cauldron to slopes

Sofia Goggia had a bit of a rough run, having to save herself at least twice. Understandable, given she couldn’t have gotten much sleep. The Italian lit the cauldron in Cortina. 

World Cup race rescheduled for after Olympics

The downhill that was scrubbed after Lindsey Vonn’s crash will now be held in March.

Organizers cancelled the downhill in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, after three of the first six skiers – Vonn included – crashed. Vonn suffered a torn ACL, bone bruising and meniscus damage in her left knee, but is determined to still ski at the Milano Cortina Olympics.

The International Ski Federation said Saturday the race is being moved to Val di Fassa, Italy, and be held on March 6. That means there will be two downhills and a super-G at Val di Fassa, the final speed races before the World Cup finals.

What time does Olympic women’s downhill training start today?

The final women’s Alpine skiing downhill training session is scheduled to begin Saturday, Feb. 7 at 5:30 a.m. ET in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy.

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Washington Wizards center Anthony Davis is not expected to play the rest of the season, NBA TV reports.

According to the report, Davis will use the time off to get fully healthy for the 2026-27 season.

Davis has not played since he was injured late in the fourth quarter on Jan. 8 in a loss against the Utah Jazz when he was a member of the Dallas Mavericks, scoring 21 points with 11 rebounds in 35 minutes.

He was expected to return from ligament damage in his left hand in about six weeks.

Once Davis is healthy enough to play, he is expected to team up with guard Trae Young, who was traded from the Atlanta Hawks. Young has been sidelined since Dec. 27 with knee and quadriceps injuries and will be re-evaluated after the All-Star break.

The 32-year-old Davis, a 10-time All-Star, is averaging 20.4 points, 11.1 rebounds, 2.8 assists, and 1.7 blocks in the 20 games he has appeared in this season.

Washington (14-36) has the league’s worst point differential and is giving up 122.6 points a game, second worst in the NBA. The Wizards have missed the postseason in each of the last four seasons.

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BORMIO, Italy – Switzerland’s Franjo von Allmen reduced the home country cheers, but he didn’t silence them completely. Two Italian skiers won medals behind von Allmen’s gold in the men’s downhill Saturday at Stelvio Ski Centre, the first medal event of the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics.Giovanni Franzoni and Dominik Paris of Italy cracked the top three on back-to-back runs in front of roaring Italian fans. But neither could overtake von Allmen’s time of 1:51.61.

‘Super happy. Feels kind of like a movie,’ von Allmen said on the NBC broadcast just before securing the win. He also said he thought a lot about his father today, who died when von Allmen was 17.Ryan Cochran-Siegle, Team USA’s best hope in the event, struggled to post a 1:53.65, well back of the leaders in 18th place. Kyle Negomir (1:53.20) posted the best time of the four Americans in the field for a 10-place finish.

The other two U.S. skiers, Bryce Bennett (1:53.45) and Sam Morse (1:53.68), placed 13th and 19th, respectively.

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  • Eileen Gu is a three-time Olympic medalist in freestyle skiing, competing for China.
  • She is the highest-paid Winter Olympics athlete, earning $23 million in 2025.
  • Gu, who was born in the United States, has not publicly clarified her citizenship status.
  • In addition to being an athlete, she is a student at Stanford University and a fashion model.

Model. Student. Gold medalist.

Women’s free ski superstar Eileen Gu is on the record saying she wants to do it all, and at 22 years old, she has.

Gu, born in the United States but a competitor for China, where her mother Yan – who raised her – is from, studies at Stanford in non-Olympic years. She is also a three-time Olympic medalist, with gold medals in the big air and halfpipe events and a silver medal in slopestyle.

Eileen Gu at 2026 Olympics

Gu’s success at the Beijing Games made her one of the most recognizable athletes in China, where she can’t go anywhere without being mobbed by the public.

As Gu continues to sidestep citizenship questions, she enters these Games with three Olympic medals from Beijing 2022 (big air gold, halfpipe gold, slopestyle silver), when she was 18. She became the most successful women’s free skier ever this year, with 20 victories on the World Cup circuit. She also won at the inaugural Snow League event in China in December.

How much does Eileen Gu make?

According to Sportico, Gu is the highest-paid Winter Olympics athlete and made $23 million in 2025, putting her fourth on the earnings list among female athletes. The first three are tennis players.

Why does Eileen Gu compete for China?

Gu, whose father is American, spent her summers in Beijing and chose to compete for China in 2019. Gu will be a junior at Stanford when she returns to college and studies international relations.

She refuses to comment on her citizenship status, although she competes for China, which does not allow dual citizenship with another country. Born in the States, Gu would have had to renounce her American status, unless China is making an exception. (The Chinese Olympic governing body has also refused to comment on Gu’s eligibility but is happy to have her medals count for the team.)

Does Eileen Gu model?

Gu is also involved in the fashion industry, with modeling credits for Victoria’s Secret and Louis Vuitton. According to Time Magazine, she opened and closed the Bosideng show in Milan, closed the Brunello Cucinelli show in Shanghai and posed for the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue. Her sponsors include brands such as Red Bull, Tiffany, and Porsche, and Chinese companies Anta Sports, Mengniu Dairy, and Luckin Coffe.

Her connection to the fashion industry, passion for food and the skiing make it an ideal location for Gu.

‘I love Milan,’ she told Olympics.com. ‘Obviously, we have fashion weeks here. One particularly special experience was a show I opened and closed a couple of Milan fashion weeks ago, which took place where (Leonardo da Vinci’s) ‘The Last Supper’ was painted. It was this gorgeous, picturesque vineyard with a beautiful villa.”  

What makes Eileen Gu so good?

Gu landed a double cork 1620 to delight the home crowd in China four years ago to claim her big air gold. No woman has ever won more World Cups than her (20) and she also won the inaugural Snow League competition (started by Shaun White) at Secret Garden in December.

She told Olympics.com she was entering the 2026 Milano Cortina Games with ‘no chip on my shoulder.’

‘There’s no burden,’ she told Olympics.com. ‘There is nothing to defend, no defending gold medalist. I’m here to compete just like everyone else, do my very best, and we’ll see what happens.’

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Now the International Ski and Snowboard Federation has dismissed it all as a ‘wild rumor.’

The discussion first surfaced in the Bild, a German newspaper, that reported ski jumpers allegedly get penile-enlarging injections of hyaluronic acid to increase the size of their suit and, as a result, the distance of their jumps.

The matter escalated when the World Anti-Doping Agency said it would investigate if there were evidence to support the claims. But the International Ski and Snowboard Federation largely rejected that possibility in an email sent from the federation’s communications director, Bruno Sassi.

“As for the hyaluronic acid claims: this wild rumor started off a few weeks ago from pure hearsay,’ Sassi wrote in an email to USA TODAY Sports. ‘There has never been any indication, let alone evidence, that any competitor has ever made use of a hyaluronic acid injection to attempt to gain a competitive advantage.”

The sport still is reeling from a verifiable scandal. The head coach and assistant coach of the Norway men’s team were suspended for 18 months for their role in manipulating jumpers’ suits at the Nordic World Ski Championships in March. Two ski jumpers implicated in the matter each accepted a three-month suspension.

The manipulation of the suits involved the seams of the crotch area, according to the Associated Press.

Sassi said 3D scans have been introduced as a step to combat ‘the intentional lowering of the crotch measurement to gain advantage over opponents.’

‘That is because in Ski Jumping, the main benefit that can be obtained through equipment manipulation is to enhance aerodynamics,’ he wrote of increasing the surface of the jumping suit that is in contact with the air midflight. ‘Even a few millimeters can make a substantial difference in the length of a jump. For that purpose, one of the most critical parts of the Ski Jumping suit is the crotch area ― it is the area of which scrutiny from teams, athletes, and equipment controllers is the highest.’

The athletes’ body measurements are taken by the federation once a year, and the data gives officials the ability to ensure the proper-sized suits are being worn rather than larger-sized suits that in violation of the rules could increase jumping distance.

The aerodynamics of ski jumping

Christopher Roy, a professor and aerodynamics expert at Virginia Tech, told USA TODAY Sports he thinks penile injections could lead to increased jumping distance.

Based purely on aerodynamics, he stressed.

‘In ski jumping, basically the main goal is maximize your lift while minimizing your drag,’ Roy said. ‘And if you can do that, that just equates to going farther. In terms of the ski jump, from what I understand for this question about the penile injections thing, it’s very much akin to the recent scandal from the Norwegians about modifying the suits.’

Comparing Norwegian suit modification to the alleged use of penile-enlargement injections, Roy cited both as attempts to increase the surface area of the suit.

And of the alleged injections, he said, ‘It probably wouldn’t take much surface area to equate to another meter or two in terms of the distance of the jump.’

However, Roy noted a significant caveat with the injections.

‘I don’t know how to put this delicately,’ he said. ‘If it’s creating a bulge in the crotch area, that would actually have a very detrimental effect. But if it somehow increases the surface area while maintaining a smooth aerodynamic shape on the body, then that could have an (advantageous) effect.’

An Olympian weighs in

Casey Larson, a two-time Olympic ski jumper, sounded equal parts frustrated and intrigued by rumors of the penile injections.

Frustrated because he thinks it’ll cost the sport young jumpers whose parents might worry about the rumors.

‘It’s super addicting, flying through the air like a squirrel,’ said Larson, who competed in the 2018 Olympics and 2022 Olympics before becoming a coach in Park City, Utah. ‘And I don’t want that to get lost on some dumb scandal that, really at the end of the day, I don’t even know if it’s real.’

At the same time, Larson compared ski jumping to Formula One racing and the constant fine tuning of equipment, which includes the suit. In some cases, he said, resources separate the best jumpers from the rest as they all hunt for ways to increase their jump distance.

But going to the lengths to penile injections? For someone who would have done anything to have a gold medal hanging around his neck, Larson said, he couldn’t rule out sticking ‘a needle down there’ had he known about the procedure before he retired.

‘It’ll make you a better skier,’ he said. ‘It will allow you to fly farther. Big suits help you fly and make you feel like a flying squirrel.’

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MILAN — The Mona Lisa. People dressed as coffee makers. Mariah Carey. Fun cheers. Heavy boos.

It’s a fact the Olympic opening ceremony is a made-for-TV extravaganza, meant to wow a global audience from start to finish. 

But it’s just as spectacular in person, and even better, allows you to catch things you likely didn’t see on the broadcast. Luckily, USA TODAY Sports caught it all from the site of the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony, capturing the live action art displayed throughout the night.

Even though the opening ceremony began at 2 p.m. ET on Friday, Feb. 6, the festivities started 30 minutes before inside Milano San Siro Olympic Stadium with a preshow DJ and hosts teaching the crowd dances for the show. The crowd did its own thing, giving off a classic European soccer vibe in a stadium known for it.

It may have looked packed during the show, people braving the cold outdoor conditions, but it wasn’t entirely full, with noticeable empty seats in the upper northeast and east side of the stadium.

The colorful early sequence certainly brightened the show from the jump, but a closer look at who made the rainbow palette and you’d realize they were all figures that define Italy. There were people dressed like Ancient Romans, bakers, the Mona Lisa and, in a tribute to Italian design, the coffee maker.

That made way for Mariah Carey’s highly anticipated performance. You didn’t notice the snail’s pace she was moving at coming out of the corner of the stadium, knowing Carey was making her way to the center of the stage. Her Italian singing was impressive, and it sure helped she had a screen to help enunciate the words. 

Then came the hilarious ending, where a crew sprinted to the center of the stage, while Carey just stood there, waiting. Just as it began, it was a slow walk off for the artist.

When the Olympic protocol for Milano Cortina began, the crowd made it known how much it respects Italy President ​​Sergio Mattarella. His showing in the introduction video drew a loud cheer that happened any time he was shown, with legendary Italian racer Valentino Rossi getting the same reception.

The lead-up to the parade of athletes was as dazzling as it was on TV, with the fireworks of the Olympic rings brightening the entire stadium. The Olympian introductions was different, with athletes spread out in the region, but regardless of how many athletes were and weren’t present, the nations drew a wide array of reactions.

To no surprise, the home crowd gave a rousing ovation to Italy at the conclusion, but several neighboring countries got a little extra love prior. Nations like Spain, Germany and France drew noticeable reactions, but they didn’t compare to the cheers Ukraine got at its announcement. It was by far the longest sustained cheering for another European country.

But there were boos. They mostly came during the introduction of Israel, a sustained jeer coming down amid the country’s highly criticized actions in the Gaza Strip.

The other negative reaction wasn’t toward a nation, but for someone in the audience. The United States actually was positively received by the crowd, but that ended when Vice President JD Vance was shown on the stadium screens, turning the cheers into boos. There have been protests in Milan over the Trump Administration’s use of ICE in the U.S. and presence for the Olympics.

While the event went on in Milan, crowds began to dwindle in Livigno and Cortina as spectators braved the frigid temperatures for a segment that lasted more than an hour. 

Athletes got to see the second half of the opening ceremony, but that didn’t mean they stayed seated. Some Olympians got up and mingled with each other, sometimes going off into other sections or wandering around.

However, they all were tuned in for the ending sequence of the Olympic cauldron being lit, which brightened up the stadium as the fire burned in Milano and Cortina. 

The festivities didn’t end with that, either. As the stadium started to empty, athletes stayed on the stage, taking team photos and photos with other nations. Olympic staff got to snag pictures and meet the athletes.

A wholesome ending, perfectly embodying the Olympic spirit to officially kick off the Games.  

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